Immune System Mistake Can Cause Organ Failure

An immune system "mistake" resulting from the evolutionary process could be the cause of organ failure in intensive care patients.

At least one in every two intensive care patient displays Systematic Inflammatory Response Syndrome (SIRS). This clinical picture resembles sepsis but without any identifiable bacterial or fungal infection being present. Until now the exact cause of this syndrome was unknown. Researchers at MedUni Vienna Department of Internal Medicine II have now discovered a possible cause of this "pseudo-sepsis": the immune system mistakes the mitochondria that find their way into the blood following circulatory collapse or cardiac arrest for bacteria and so attacks them. The explanation for this goes back 1.5 billion years and is based on the so-called endosymbiotic theory.

The endosymbiotic theory states that, over the course of evolution, single-celled organisms have joined forces symbiotically to form a higher organism (endosymbionts). In this case, single-celled organisms absorbed bacteria, which then became their mitochondria, also known as the powerhouses of the cells, because it is here that the energy-providing molecule adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is produced.

In the case of Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome (SIRS), the results obtained by the MedUni Vienna researchers suggest that the immune system "mistakes" the mitochondria for the bacteria from which they originally arose (since the DNA structure of the mitochondria is the same as that of the bacteria) and so responds to them with an inflammatory reaction. "When patients suffering from shock and organ damage release higher levels of mitochondrial DNA and this bonds to special signal-transmitting molecules, TLR 9 receptors, the risk of organ failure increases and the chances of surviving the disease decrease," explains Walter Speidl of the University Department of Internal Medicine II (cardiology department). Researchers now want to find out whether this "pseudo-sepsis" can be prevented by inhibiting TLR 9 receptors.

Fluctuations in female sex hormones could play a role in the development of allergies and asthma, a major review of evidence suggests. Analysis of studies involving more than 500,000 women highlights a link between asthma symptoms and key life changes such as puberty and menopause. Further investigation could help explain why asthma is more common in boys than girls in childhood, but more common in teenage girls and women following puberty.

Opioid use is associated with a significantly increased risk for serious invasive pneumococcal infections, such as pneumonia and meningitis. These findings back up previous observations in animal studies.